Ainun Najib

Informasi Bisnis Indonesia

History and Origins of Buffalo Horn Chain Necklace

 

Horn chain necklace is a form of jewelry that is worn and hung around the neck. It is most commonly made in flexible shapes such as chains, strands of beads, pearls, gemstones, or other natural materials. In addition that necklace also can be made of more inflexible metal bands adorned with gemstones, pearls, beads, or other techniques such as engraving, and filigree granulation.

The length of the necklace varies, and the specific types associated with extremes range from short necklaces or dog collars that fit around the main part of the neck to long neck chains or strands of beads sometimes used to hang down all the way to the waist.

 

The symbolic meaning of the Buffalo Horn Chain Necklace

Like other pieces of jewelry, the necklace has become an important site of decoration for the body but also communication for the person. As a material culture that is valued, necklaces communicate wealth, power, affiliation, prestige, the level of resources and skills, and elements of identity and position. The durability of jewelry such as necklaces made of metal, glass beads or gemstones provides an opportunity to appreciate and understand technology, cultural practices, art, and other cultural aesthetics and periods of time.

The history of the necklace begins with the form of a simple necklace made from a series of local organic materials such as shells, teeth, or bone beads is one form of jewelry that was adopted by early cultures throughout the world. More valuable materials are also valued for early time, often in the form of beads, such as those from the Mediterranean red coral found in the Neolithic cemetery in the Alps (around 4200-3400 BC). Other early types of necklaces include torc or torque, an ancient Celtic neckpiece made of bent metal, and lunula, variations of the flat, crescent-shaped and engraved moon found in the Bronze Age of Ireland and Scotland (circa 1800-1500 BC).

 

Style and Trends of Buffalo Horn Chain Necklace in the middle ages

The necklace is made to display decorative features and styles that are appropriate for each period and from one region to another. Each period also has some influence on who follows, and the novelty of styles, such as the classic Greek and Roman necklaces or Egyptian beaded collars, is prevalent. During the Middle Ages, jewelry became a more integral element of dresses, and necklaces replaced brooches as the main form of jewelry in the late Gothic period and early Renaissance. Necklaces made with gemstones and heavy gold chain necklaces with pendants in style as differences in wealth and social status from the fourteenth and fifteenth through the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.

The trend for wearing a necklace mostly follows the style of the neckline in European and American fashionable clothes. In other words, when the neckline is lowered, more, and more complicated, a necklace is seen. But this does not mean that the necklace is not worn when the neckline is in a high position. For example, a carcanet is a kind of wide, bejeweled or enameled necklace that resemble a collar. It was worn by men as a status symbol in the 15th to 17th centuries, encircling the base of the neck above the shoulder of a man and under a c lace tassel, or worn with a gold chain wrapped around the neck, or hung on the shoulder at the front.

Victorian jewelry is one of the popular necklace styles. The necklace is a major part of an eighteenth-century or jewelry set suitable for a woman, which also includes brooches, earrings, bracelets, and pendants or tiaras. The necklace is intended to be worn as evening wear with a lower décolletage corset, while the higher necklace includes everyday clothing including brooches or pendants.

This harmonious set concept lasted until the early twentieth century until dresses became more casual and when costume jewelry that was affordable but still attractive was widely available. New materials such as plastics and new technologies related to mass production and mass media have expanded the social repertoire. The Buffalo Horn chain necklace at the end of the twentieth century is designed to follow fashion trends and popular culture, but also to meet the various needs of women’s clothing based on opportunity, taste, or preference.